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Shop openly sells cannabis for medicinal use
Supplier claims police turn blind eye to drug dealing
Sarah Hall
Guardian
Saturday June 16, 2001
The owner of a health food shop is openly selling cannabis for
medicinal use in the heart of London's King's Cross with the apparent
approval of local police, the Guardian can reveal.
Tony Taylor, of Tony's Hemp Corner, has around 250 customers, including
doctors and lawyers. He claims local police, who arrested him on
charges of growing and supplying the plant three years ago, turn
a blind eye to his practice as they concentrate on tackling the
area's prostitutes and crack cocaine dealers.
The news of Mr Taylor's unorthodox business - and the apparent
response of Islington police - comes the day after the Guardian
revealed that Scotland Yard has officially endorsed a controversial
plan not to caution or arrest people caught carrying or using the
Class B drug but to give them on-the-spot warnings instead.
Senior officers, including the Metropolitan commissioner, Sir John
Stevens, believe the scheme, to be piloted in Lambeth, south London,
from next month, is "sensible and progressive", a view
endorsed by the drug policy reform group Transform, who described
it as "the beginning of the end for current drugs laws".
But the Met is bracing itself for accusations that it is "going
soft".
Mr Taylor, who was given an absolute discharge after his arrest
three years ago, yesterday described the attitude of police in London's
red-light district to his business as "really cool".
"The council and the police know exactly what's going on and
the police think what I'm doing is really good," he said from
his office, where he keeps accounts and copies of the GP letters
he requires.
"They come around sometimes and say, 'How are you doing, are
there any problems?' We've obviously been granted grace because
there are so many other problems in King's Cross."
However, Islington police last night denied they knew about Mr
Taylor's medicinal cannabis dealing. "We weren't aware that
he was prescribing drugs for patients with GPs' letters," said
Detective Chief Inspector Robin Hopes. "We'd like to get around
a table with him and work out if what he's doing is legal or illegal."
Mr Taylor, who offers cannabis at less than the street price, refuses
to supply it for recreational use and clients have to fill in a
form, undergo a 20-minute interview and provide him with a GP's
letter.
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